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Samhain: Season of Death and Renewal by Alexei Kondratiev
Copyright © 1997 Alexei Kondratiev All Rights Reserved
May be reposted as long as the above attribution and copyright notice are retained.
As the nights lengthen and the leaves take on their autumn colours, many of our cities
prepare for a seasonal festival dominated by dark and frightening imagery. Ghosts,
skeletons, hags, nocturnal creatures such as cats and bats, and grinning monster faces
peer out at us from shop windows. Much of it is just commercialism, yet there is no
denying that the atmosphere of the holiday still has a profound effect on the modern
psyche -- as we can see from the spontaneous outrageousness of Hallowe'en parades, the
creative expressions of death-related themes, and the general surge in mischief-making.
All these customs, however, are a diffuse reflection of the beliefs and practices of the
Celtic populations of Europe, for whom this feast was a crucial turning-point in the flow
of time.
The earliest record we have of the festival of Samhain in the Celtic world comes from the
Coligny Calendar, a native Celtic lunar calendar inscribed on bronze tablets and
discovered in eastern France a hundred years ago. The calendar -- dated, through
epigraphic evidence, to the 1st century CE -- is written in the Latin alphabet and was
found in conjunction with a Roman-style statue (identified by some writers as Apollo, by
others as Mars), but the language used is Gaulish and the dating system itself bears
little resemblance to Roman models, implying that it represents the survival of an
indigenous tradition maintained by native clergy. A detailed discussion of the calendar
lies outside the scope of this article, but for our purposes it will be enough to point
out that its year consists of twelve regularly recurring months that fall naturally into
two groups, one headed by the month that is labeled SAMON (for Samonios) and the other by
the month GIAMON (for Giamonios), and that the names of these two months are clearly
related to the terms samos "summer" and giamos "winter" (cf. Gaelic
samh(radh) "summer", geamh(radh) "winter"; Welsh haf
"summer", gaeaf "winter"). The date of SAMON- xvii is identified as
TRINVX SAMO SINDIV, which can be readily interpreted as an abbreviation of Trinouxtion
Samonii sindiu ("The three-night-period of Samonios [is] today"). This is one of
the very few dates in the calendar that is given a specific name, testifying to its
importance as a festival; and since Samoni- is obviously the origin of the modern name
Samhain, it is reasonable to
equate the Trinouxtion Samonii with the feast that is still one of the most important
dates in the Celtic ritual year.
We should note, however, that since the Coligny Calendar gives no indication of how its
months relate to those of the Roman calendar, we have no conclusive evidence that would
allow us to fit it into the framework of our own year, and scholars are still very much
divided on the issue. The most confusing element, of course, is that Samon- refers to
summer, and so would naturally lead one to think that a month with that name would head
the summer half of the year; and many of the earlier interpretations of the Coligny
Calendar take this for granted. In living Celtic tradition, however, the festival of
Samhain, despite its name, is definitely the beginning of winter. Though such evidence
doesn't necessarily exclude the possibility that Continental Druids used a completely
different terminology, many scholars now accept the authority of the living tradition and
place the Samonios month in October/November.
What does the name of the festival mean, however? Here, again,we run into controversy. The
traditional interpretation -- first put forward in the Mediaeval glossaries and still held
to by native speakers -- is that it means "summer's end", being a combination of
samh "summer" and fuin "ending, concealment". This is obviously a folk
etymology, since we know that the earliest form of the word (Samoni-) had a different
structure, but its importance to the living tradition should make us wary of dismissing it
too lightly. Although philologists have been unable to find a plausible Indo-European
explanation for a suffix -oni- meaning "end of" (the suffix, by the way, occurs
in at least three of the other Coligny months), this is
not conclusive in itself: there are quite a few other derivational suffixes attested in
Old Celtic that resist an easy Indo-European etymology, although their meanings are
uncontroversial. What should be kept in mind is that in the ritual context of the Celtic
Year, Samhain is strongly identified with the "end" or "concealment"
of Summer, the Light Half of the year. In the modern Gaelic languages the festival is
called Samhain (Irish), Samhuinn (Scots Gaelic), and Sauin (Manx). The night on which it
begins (Oíche Shamhna in Irish, Oidhche Shamhna in Scots Gaelic, Oie Houney in Manx) is
the primary focus of the celebration. The Brythonic languages call the feast by a name
meaning "first of Winter", borrowing the Latin term calenda which designates the
first day of a month (Welsh Calan Gaeaf, Breton Kala-Goañv, Cornish Kalann Gwav), but the
beliefs and practices associated with it are consistent with what we find in the Gaelic
countries, and will help us discover a pan-Celtic theology of Samhain.
The Coligny Calendar's division of the year into two halves associated with summer and
winter is still very strongly reflected in Celtic folk practice, where the yearly cycle
consists of a dark half beginning on Samhain (November 1st), mirrored by a light half
beginning on Bealtaine (May 1st). The rituals surrounding Samhain and Bealtaine are
closely related to each other and make it clear that the two festivals are linked, but
also that they deal with opposite energies within the unfolding of the year. What is
explicit and active in one is implicit and dormant in the other, and vice versa. This is
often expressed as the notion that what disappears in our world at once becomes present in
the Otherworld, and it has even been suggested, on this basis, that Samhain's
"summery" name was originally intended to designate the beginning of an
Otherworld summer! Whether this is plausible or not, it remains certain that while Samhain
began one kind of yearly cycle, Bealtaine began another, and both could be construed as a
kind of "New Year". In ancient Ireland the High King inaugurated the year on
Samhain for his household (and, symbolically, for all the people of Ireland) with the
famous ritual of Tara, but in nearby Uisneach, the sacred centre held by the druids in
complementary opposition to Tara, it was on Bealtaine that the main ritual cycle was
begun. In both cases sacred fires were extinguished and re-lit, though this happened at
sunset on Samhain and at dawn on Bealtaine. Bealtaine was a time of opening and expansion,
Samhain a time of gathering-in and shutting, and for herd-owners like the Celts this was
expressed with particular vividness by the release of cattle into upland pastures on
Bealtaine and their return to the safety of the byres on Samhain.
Which of these two dates, then, should we think of primarily as the "Celtic New
Year"? Although both deal with the beginning of a cycle, Samhain begins it in
darkness, and there is no doubt about the pre-eminence of darkness in Celtic tradition. In
De Bello Gallico Julius Caesar notes that the Celts began their daily cycle with sunset
(spatia omnis temporis non numero dierum, sed noctium finiunt;
dies natales et mensum et annorum initia sic obseruant, ut noctem dies subsequatur --
"they define all amounts of time not by the number of days, but by the number of
nights; they celebrate birthdays and the beginnings of months and years in such a way that
the day is made to follow the night"), and this is confirmed by later Celtic
practice. Darkness comes before light, because life appears in the darkness of the womb,
all things have their beginning in the fertile chaos that is hidden from the rational
mind. Thus the year begins with its dark half, holding the bright half in gestation as the
seeds lie in apparent death underground, although the forces of growth are already at work
in Otherworldly invisibility. The moment of death -- the passing into the concealing
darkness -- is itself the first step in the renewal of life.
This association of death with fertility provided the theological background for a great
number of end-of-harvest festivals celebrated by many cultures across Eurasia. Like
Samhain, these festivals (which, for example, included the rituals of the Dyedy
("Ancestors") in the Slavic countries and the Vetrarkvöld festival in
Scandinavia) linked the successful resumption of the agricultural cycle (after a period of
apparent winter "death") to the propitiation of the human community's dead. The
dead have passed away from the social concerns of this world to the primordial chaos of
the Otherworld where all fertility has its roots, but they are still bound to the living
by ties of kinship. It was hoped that, by strengthening these ties
precisely when the natural cycle seemed to be passing through its own moment of death, the
community of the living would be better able to profit from the energies of increase that
lead out of death back to life. Dead kin were the Tribe's allies in the Otherworld, making
it certain that the creative forces deep within the Land were being directed to serve the
needs of the human community. They were, in Celtic terms, a "humanising" factor
within the Fomorian realm.
Whatever the specific elements had been that determined the proper date of the
end-of-harvest honouring of the dead in various places, by the ninth and tenth centuries
the unifying influence of the Church had led to concentrating the rituals on November 1st
and November 2nd. The first date was All Hallows, when the most spiritually powerful of
the Christian community's dead (the Saints) were invoked to strengthen the living
community, in a way quite consistent with pre-Christian thought. The second date, All
Souls, was added on (first as a Benedictine practice, beginning ca. 988) as an extension
of this concept, enlarging it to include the dead of families and local communities. Under
the mantle of the specifically Christian observances, however, older patterns of ancestor
veneration were preserved.
Most traditional Celtic communities maintain a year-round link of some sort with their
departed, making them a part of all significant occurrences in the family, such as births,
weddings and funerals. In areas of the Irish Gaeltacht it is still not unusual for a
household to have a seomra thiar ("western room"), a section of the house (often
just a nook or alcove) dedicated to the dead of the family. Objects that bring individual
dead relatives to mind (old photographs, pipes, jewelry, etc) are placed on a shelf or
mantlepiece, and as one contemplates them one faces the setting sun and the vastness of
the Atlantic, the direction the dead follow in their journey to the Otherworld. The
rituals of Samhain, however, involved a more intense bonding with the dead, using the
institution which, in Celtic tradition, was used to cement social links in a sacred and
durable manner: the communal feast. Sharing food in a solemn context ("in the sight
of gods and mortals") placed common and mutual responsibilities on all participants.
Inviting the dead to such a feast encouraged the living to remember and honour their
ancestors, while the dead in return were encouraged to have an interest in the welfare of
their living kin.
On Samhain, the moment of the year's death, this world and the Otherworld become
equivalent to each other, classificatory boundaries are removed from all categories, no
barriers exist between the dead and the living, so both can authentically come together in
one place to share a ritual feast. Individual Celtic communities have preserved a wealth
of different customs related to the way this feast was actually celebrated: one can still
discern some distorted elements of them in modern urban practices, such as Hallowe'en
parties and trick-or-treating. Most of the customs, however, fall into two broad patterns.
According to the first, a certain amount of food was set aside for the exclusive
consumption of the dead. The dead were believed to be present as invisible entities; doors
and windows were left unlocked to facilitate their coming into the house. In some cases, a
specific type of food (usually cakes of some kind) was made solely for the dead; in
others, a portion of the same food that the living would eat was set aside for them. The
most classic example of this pattern (which is also found in Ireland and
Scotland) is the boued an Anaon ("food of the hosts of the dead") custom in
Brittany. The Anaon (the word appears to be the same as Annwn, the Welsh Otherworld; it is
certainly a pre-Christian term) are the massed hosts of ancestral spirits, usually
portrayed as hungry for sustenance from the world of the living. A large amount of food
was set aside for their sole use, and had to remain untouched by any living hand for the
full duration of the ritual period. Eating the food of the dead (even if one was
desperately hungry) was considered to be a dreadful sacrilege: it condemned one to
becoming a hungry ghost after death, barred from sharing the Samhain feast along with the
rest of the Anaon. It was, in effect, a particularly horrible form of excommunication.
The other pattern of Samhain custom, on the contrary, encourages the recycling of the
offered food into the community, thus strengthening social bonds. The most classic example
of this second pattern is the Welsh cennad y meirw ("embassy of the dead")
custom, although similar customs are found elsewhere in the Celtic and ex-Celtic world.
Here, while the wealthier members of the community put together lavish Samhain feasts for
their households, the poor take on the collective identity of the community's dead, and go
from door to door to receive offerings in the name of the ancestors. At each house they
are given portion of the food that has been set aside for the dead. Originally the
cenhadon would have been masked to abolish their mundane social roles and allow them to
represent the dead more convincingly. To refuse food to the cenhadon for any reason at all
was an act of impiety and would invite retaliation in the form of destruction of property
-- retaliation that would go unpunished because of the holy nature of the ritual period.
We can here see one of the origins of the "trick" aspect of our modern
Hallowe'en customs, although nowadays it has largely lost its moral dimension.
A communal feast, of course, involves more than just food. The dead would not only have to
be fed, they would have to be entertained. Games and pastimes associated with Samhain
feasting vary a great deal from community to community, but they have certain themes in
common. While the younger people engage in the ritualised games, the elders will be
gossiping, reviewing all the notable events of the past year for the benefit of the dead,
who will then be encouraged to continue to take an interest in the affairs of the living.
The games themselves, in many cases, seem to have specific links with the mythology of
death and the afterlife. Many of them involve apples -- in part, of course, because they
are one of the last crops to be brought in and are thus easily available, but also as a
reflection of the role apples play in beliefs about death: in Irish tradition the
Otherworld place where the dead gather at a feast is called Eamhain Abhlach
("paradise of apples"), and its Welsh equivalent is Afallon. Some of the
Scottish games in this context make use of parallel ordeals by water and fire, the two
main elements out of which the world is made. The water ordeal is the familiar bobbing for
apples, while the fire ordeal involves trying to take a bite out of an apple attached to a
hanging stick which also bears a lit candle. This seems to be a reference to myths about
the ordeals faced by the dead on their journey to the Otherworld -- a body of beliefs we
unfortunately know only through fragments, although the basic concept of the journey and
the ordeals is well established. Sharing the experiences of the dead was yet another way
of affirming the solidarity between the dead and the living, and of aligning the powers of
renewal in the Otherworld with this world's needs.
While the dead were brought closer to the living by the formal sharing of food, other
offerings had to be made to the Land-spirits to reward them for their cooperation during
the Harvest period, and to replenish their creative energy as they prepared to enter into
a new cycle. With Samhain, the period of "truce" that had begun on Lúnasa was
officially ended, and the fruits of the soil(especially wild crops) could no longer be
harvested with impunity. Well within living memory, children in Celtic communities were
warned not to eat the late berries that might still be ripening on roadside bushes,
because "the fairies" or "the devil" had made them dangerous to
consume. Having enabled the human community to survive by making the crops grow and by
standing aside to let the Harvest take place, the powers of the Fomorian realm were now
entitled to a gift of life-renewing blood; and Samhain was the season when the cattle that
would not be kept through the winter were slaughtered. In historical times the date of the
slaughter has specifically been Martinmas (November 11), certainly in part because the
name of the saint suggested the Gaelic word mart ("cattle marked for
slaughter"). As late as the 1830's, when Amhlaoibh Ó Súilleabháin discussed some
ofthese customs in his famous diary, the occasion was understood as a ritual
"shedding of blood", and other sources show that during the same period blood
sacrifices could even still be held indoors, to protect a house from malignant
"fairy" influences by sprinkling an offering of blood at each corner.
Renewing social links with the dead and feeding the Land-spirits were both ritual means of
ensuring a safe future. While Samhain (and the phenomenon of death which it celebrated)
was obviously the end of a cycle, it was more importantly the start of a new one. Because
all true novelty springs from the chaotic freedom and vitality of the Otherworld, a new
cycle could be inaugurated only by dissolving all of the structures of the old one -- just
as the moment of death dissolves our identity in this world, allowing the fresh energies
of the Otherworld to impel us towards new life. This meant that, as happens in the feasts
of renewal of many different cultures, certain types of social disorder were actively
encouraged during the period of the festival, because they promoted the renewing influence
of the Otherworld at the point in the yearly cycle where it would be most beneficial.
Customs originating entirely in the world of cultural values -- such as those relating to
social rank or gender-appropriate behaviour -- were the most likely to be violated.
Disrespect could be shown to elders or to members of the upper classes. Cross-dressing was
one of the most widespread and popular ways of expressing the dissolution of social
categories, and in parts of Wales groups of young men in female garb were referred to as
gwrachod ("hags" or "witches") as they wandered through the
countryside on Calan Gaeaf, indulging in all kinds of mischief.
But the disorder, of course, was only the prelude to the return of order in a strengthened
form. The structures that had been dissolved had to be re-created in order to channel the
new energy from the Otherworld in the desired directions. While local communities would
have had their own diverse methods of accomplishing this ritually (often through the
extinguishing and re-kindling of household fires), more elaborate ceremonies were
conducted by religious specialists at the sacred centres of a territory, in the name of
the entire population. In pre-Christian Ireland the ritual of Tara, focusing on the High
King in his role as linchpin of the social order, was the means for re-creating the world
on Samhain. The Middle Irish text entitled Suidigud Tellaig Temra (The Settling of the
Household of Tara) describes the essentials of the ritual and relates some of the
mythology that explains its symbolism (albeit with a somewhat Christianised background),
while Geoffrey Keating, the seventeenth-century encyclopaedist of traditional Irish lore,
provides us with additional explanations of some of the elements. Since the Land itself,
as a ritual entity, was conceived of as a square, so was Tara, for the purposes of this
ceremony, seen as a four-sided space. Each of the directions was associated with one of
the three functional classes of society (and with the divinity who was seen as the ruler
of that function), the South being devoted specifically to the power of the Land and to
the goddess who gave energy to the exercise of the social functions. The High King
occupied the centre
of the ritual area, while around him, strictly ordered by social rank, were
representatives of the four provinces. Thus, when the New Year actually dawned, the
magical heart of Ireland would contain a model of the entire social order of the country
in miniature, engaged in the solemn feasting whereby all social links were strengthened,
and all parts of the country would then benefit from the influence of
this ritual. The actual inception of the new cycle was signaled by the lighting of a fire,
not at Tara but at Tlachtga, which symbolically represented the southern province of
Munster within the High King's central realm. This was the place where Tlachtga, the
daughter of the mythological Druid Mug Ruith, died after being raped by the "sons of
Simon Magus" (who wanted to gain the knowledge and talents she had inherited from her
father) and after giving birth to three sons from three different fathers. This myth is
obviously garbled in its modern version, yet one can still discern in it the figure of the
Land-goddess and her three "functional" consorts. The association of the
festival with the pre-eminently "female" southern quarter may explain why in
some Welsh and Scottish communities it is specified by custom that Samhain ritual
(preparation of the ceremonial food, etc.) must be overseen by nine women (in contrast to
the nine men who preside over Bealtaine).
What of the role of the gods in this crucial turning-point of the ritual year? Since
virtually all our knowledge of detailed ritual practices among the Celts comes from
Christianised communities, references to divinities who were actually worshipped are, as
one would expect, rare and indirect. However, some of the stories preserved in both
folklore and mediaeval literature seem relevant to the theology of this feast. Images such
as that of the hero Diarmait killed by a boar after his romance with Fionn Mac Cumhail's
wife Gráinne; or that of wild Myrddin emerging from the forest with a herd of stags to
kill his wife's lover by piercing him with a pair of antlers; or that of Gwyn ap Nudd
("White son of Mistmaker") fighting with Gwythyr ap Greidawl ("Wrathful son
of Hot") every Calan Mai (Bealtaine) "until the day of Judgment" for the
hand of their common love, Creiddylad; and the notion of the Fianna living off the
wilderness from Bealtaine to Samhain and indoors from Samhain to Bealtaine all suggest a
myth of certain divinities changing their status in relation to the Land-goddess in
response to the change of seasons along the Samhain-Bealtaine axis. The common denominator
of these motifs seems to be the figure of the antlered god now conventionally referred to
as "Cernunnos", whose mythology has definite links to the stories of the Fianna
and whose attributes symbolise seasonal change as well as the interface between nature and
culture. Antlers are a seasonal phenomenon: they drop off in winter and begin to reappear
as velvet at winter's end, returning to full glory in the spring. In Scots Gaelic
terminology, the month immediately preceding Samhain is called an Damhar (damh-ghar,
"stag-rut"), because it is when stags clash with each other during the mating
season, shortly before losing their antlers, as the antlered god must undoubtedly lose his
(which is why some "Cernunnos" statues -- like the one from St. Germain --
apparently had holes for removable antlers). Our sense of the seasonal importance of this
event in Celtic ritual symbolism is reinforced by the custom in southwestern Brittany of
baking appropriately shaped cakes called kornigoù ("little horns") to celebrate
the coming of winter. From the many versions of the myth one can deduce that the antlered
god is separated from his goddess-consort (who takes another lover) during the light half
of the year, when he must live as a renunciate in the wilderness and wear his horns; but
that with the coming of the dark season his rival is eliminated and he can return to his
consort's embrace in the Otherworld -- abandoning, by the same token, the
"horns" of his cuckoldry. It is unlikely to be a coincidence that the bonnag
Samhna -- the Samhain cake prepared specifically for the ritual-- made by the women who
preside over the Samhain feast in parts of Gaelic Scotland is named after a cuckold in the
community. And we find echoes of the same motif (as we often do) at the other end of the
Indo-European world, in the ritual calendar of India, where on Divali (Dipâvali), the
Feast of Lights, which is usually celebrated very close to Samhain, Lakshmi, the goddess
of abundance and well-being, leaves her usual consort Vishnu (who falls asleep at this
time) to return temporarily to her first husband, Kubera, the fat god of material riches.
The Land-goddess, too, changes her appearance at this time: the fertile part of her
retreats to the Otherworld where she can join with her consort in beginning the creative
work of the new yearly cycle (in their summer, which is our winter, as it were), but in
our world only her "Fomorian" aspect remains, making the land barren and hostile
to human comfort. In the Scottish Highlands this is the season of the Cailleach Bheura,
the monstrous hag who wanders in the hills bringing bad weather, while in Wales we hear of
the Hwch Ddu Gwta ("tailless black sow") who lurks menacingly in the darkness.
Yet these are all aspects of the same being, the multiform Provider on whom we all depend,
who must, like all things, replenish herself through alternating periods of action and
repose, and who touches -- as we all must -- darkness and death to find the source of true
renewal.
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
Céitinn, Seathrún (Geoffrey Keating), (ed. by Padraig deBrún) Foras Feasa ar
Éirinn. Dublin, 1982.
Danaher, Kevin, The Year in Ireland. Cork, 1972.
MacNeill, Eoin, On the Notation and Chronology of the Calendar of Coligny, Ériu 10
(1926).
McNeill, F. Marian, The Silver Branch. Glasgow, 1953-66.
Owen, Trefor M., Welsh Folk Customs. Cardiff, 1959.
Rees, Alwyn & Brinley, Celtic Heritage: Ancient Tradition in Ireland and Wales.
New York. 1961.
Sébillot, P. Y., Le Folklore de la Bretagne. Paris, 1968.
Suidigud Tellaig Temra (R.I. Best, ed. and trans.), Ériu 4(1910).
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